间质细胞
免疫疗法
癌症研究
巨噬细胞
肿瘤微环境
先天免疫系统
生物
免疫学
癌症免疫疗法
肿瘤进展
免疫系统
癌症
体外
生物化学
遗传学
作者
Chong Zuo,John M. Baer,Brett L. Knolhoff,Jad I. Belle,Xiuting Liu,Angela Alarcon de la Lastra,Christina Fu,Graham D. Hogg,Natalie L. Kingston,Marcus Breden,Paarth B. Dodhiawala,Daniel Cui Zhou,Varintra E. Lander,C. Alston James,Ding Li,Kian-Huat Lim,Ryan C. Fields,William G. Hawkins,Jason D. Weber,Guoyan Zhao,David G. DeNardo
摘要
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are abundant in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDACs). While TAMs are known to proliferate in cancer tissues, the impact of this on macrophage phenotype and disease progression is poorly understood. We showed that in PDAC, proliferation of TAMs could be driven by colony stimulating factor-1 (CSF1) produced by cancer-associated fibroblasts. CSF1 induced high levels of p21 in macrophages, which regulated both TAM proliferation and phenotype. TAMs in human and mouse PDACs with high levels of p21 had more inflammatory and immunosuppressive phenotypes. p21 expression in TAMs was induced by both stromal interaction and/or chemotherapy treatment. Finally, by modeling p21 expression levels in TAMs, we found that p21-driven macrophage immunosuppression in vivo drove tumor progression. Serendipitously, the same p21-driven pathways that drive tumor progression also drove response to CD40 agonist. These data suggest that stromal or therapy-induced regulation of cell cycle machinery can regulate both macrophage-mediated immune suppression and susceptibility to innate immunotherapy.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI